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A Review of Geopolitical Risk in Russia and the Middle East

Two conflicts (Gaza, Ukraine) have escalated significantly this week, with Ukraine launching a ground incursion into Russia's Kursk region in a surprise move that Moscow was unable to thwart, and with Iran indicating on Tuesday that a Gaza ceasefire deal would "delay" retaliation against Israel.

In combination with this, there are indications that Libya's period of calm before the rival government storm is dissipating, with the Libyan National Army (LNA) strongman General Khalifa Haftar invited to talks in Egypt to the extreme distress of the rival Government of National Unity (GNU) in Tripoli.

Simultaneously, Russia continues with its Europe-flanking movements in Africa, and even though they were routed by Tuareg rebels in Mali, with help from Ukrainian intelligence, Russia's Wagner mercenaries will regroup. 

For now, without a direct retaliation by Iran for the assassination of the Hamas leader on Iranian soil, the conflict continues to simmer in proxy venues, most notably Syria, where pro-Iranian forces are targeting US-backed Kurdish forces in the northeast, where the oil is. 

The Israel-Gaza conflict is what has been driving oil prices most prominently this week, while the ongoing instability in Libya has largely been written into prices for years already, as has the Russia-Ukraine conflict - as long as it remains within Russia-Ukraine borders (noting that it has already seeped into Africa). 

Russia-Ukraine War Update: Ukraine now claims to…

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